Date: Mon, 07 Nov 2005 06:58:38 +1030 From: Matthew Smith <matt@kbc.net.au> To: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org Subject: Re: NFS Installation Issues Message-ID: <436E6776.8030507@kbc.net.au> In-Reply-To: <20051106102456.GA26939@slackbox.xs4all.nl> References: <436DCB19.2090005@kbc.net.au> <20051106102456.GA26939@slackbox.xs4all.nl>
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<snip> >>My problem is that when I select the installation source, Ethernet is >>not amongst the options (just SLIP, PPP and something else weird). > > That "something weird" could well be the ethernet card. unlike Linux, > the ethernet devices are not all named "ethX', but are named after the > driver. So it could be e.g. sk0, xl0, dc0, de0, fxp0, vr0 etc. > >>I assume that there's a kernel module not loaded, so after looking >>further through the documentation, I found that I should be able to put >>a line in /boot/defaults/loader.conf. Since the installation so far was >>actually bootable (that's one up on Linux!), I did this. All this did >>for me was to generate a warning that the module was already loaded. > > Then try to use the "something weird" as the ethernet device. Thanks for that Roland - I've had another look, but the "something weird" is PLIP, which I believe to be some parallel port communication system. So, my real question remains: how does one get a network card recognised? One piece of documentation refers to kernel configuration as part of the installation process - I don't know if that's for an older version, because this step certainly doesn't show up on mine. Cheers M -- Matthew Smith Kadina Business Consultancy, South Australia Work: <http://www.kbc.net.au> Personal: <http://www.mss.cx>
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